Moon Goddess Isis Perfume Oil by Escential Essences, 1/2oz
Moon Goddess Isis Perfume Oil by Escential Essences, 1/2oz- Primary Spiritual Use: Intuition
- Secondary Spiritual Use: Inspiration
- Tradition: Kemetic-adjacent modern practice
- Intent: Blessing, Peace
Couldn't load pickup availability
Isis, or Aset in the Egyptian, is one of the longest-worshipped deities in recorded history. Her cult ran for something close to three thousand years, outlasted the pharaohs, spread through the Roman Empire as far as Britain, and did not stop until it was suppressed. She is the goddess who gathered the scattered pieces of her murdered husband and put him back together, and the throne she wears on her head is her name written as a picture.
This is a half-ounce perfume oil from Escential Essences, named for her. It is a fragrance made by a modern American house, not a temple preparation, and honouring a deity properly starts with not confusing the two.
Key Features
Half-ounce bottle with a dropper cap. Small enough to carry, precise enough to anoint a candle without pouring.
Cosmetic-grade base, blended in the USA. Formulated for skin contact, which is not true of every ritual oil on the shelf.
A devotional-use oil. Made for altar work and for anointing, in the register of offering rather than of asking for outcomes.
Product Details
- Volume: 1/2 oz, glass bottle with dropper cap
- Maker: Escential Essences, blended in the USA
- Base: Cosmetic-grade, formulated for skin contact
- Composition: Blended fragrance oil. Patch test before wear.
- SKU: OMMOOG
The Spiritual Significance
Isis is a goddess of magic itself. In the Egyptian understanding she was the one who knew the true names of things, and knowing a true name meant power over it. She tricked Ra into revealing his own, and what she did with it was heal. That is her characteristic move throughout the mythology: she is cunning, and she uses cunning to restore rather than to destroy.
She is also a goddess of grief that does something. The Osiris story is a story about a widow who refuses the finality of a death and goes looking, piece by piece, across a whole country. Practitioners who work with Isis tend to come to her from that: not from serenity, but from the place where something has been broken and you have to go and collect it.
We are not going to promise you that this oil delivers a goddess. Devotional work is a relationship, and no bottle is a shortcut into one. What an anointing oil does in that relationship is what an offering does: it marks the attention, it makes the approach deliberate, and it says that you turned up on purpose. That is genuinely the point, and it is enough.
Contemporary Kemetic practice is a living reconstruction with practitioners who take it seriously. If you are approaching Isis as a devotee rather than as an admirer, they are worth reading, and their guidance is worth more than a product page.
How To Use
- Anoint the altar, not just yourself. A drop on an image, a statue, or an offering dish is the older gesture, and the more devotional one.
- Dress a candle for her. Blue and white are commonly used in modern Kemetic-adjacent practice; the tradition varies and no one owns the answer.
- Wear it when you approach her. Pulse points, a drop or two, so that the work has a scent attached and you notice when you are in it.
- Use it for the mending work. Grief, repair, the gathering of scattered things. That is her register, and it is the honest use for an oil named after her.
- Patch test. Cosmetic-grade or not, skin is idiosyncratic. Test inside the elbow first.
Pairs Well With
- Myrrh Perfume Oil by Escential Essences. Myrrh is the resin of Egyptian funerary rite, and it belongs in Osirian and Isian work more than almost anything else on the shelf.
- Myrrh Resin Incense, 1 oz. The actual resin, to burn on charcoal. If you are working Egyptian, this is the smoke to do it in.
- Mayan Temple Perfume Oil by Escential Essences. Another blend in the same half-ounce format from the same maker.
- Moonstone Tumbled Stones, 1 lb. If it is the lunar half of the name you are working with.
- Frankincense Resin Tears, 1 oz. The other half of the Egyptian temple pairing, for offering rather than for closing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this an authentic Egyptian preparation? No. It is a modern American fragrance oil named for Isis. Actual Egyptian temple incense, kyphi, was a compounded resin recipe and nothing like this. We would rather say so than let the label imply a provenance it does not have.
Will it help me connect with Isis? An oil does not deliver a goddess. What it does is mark your attention and make the approach deliberate, the way an offering does. Devotion is a relationship and there is no bottle that substitutes for showing up.
Can I wear it on skin? Yes, it is on a cosmetic-grade base. Patch test first regardless.
Is it an essential oil? No. It is a blended fragrance composition.
I am new to Isis. Where should I start? Not here. Read the mythology, and read contemporary Kemetic practitioners who do this seriously. An oil is a tool for a practice you already have, not an entry point to one you do not.

Spend $50 & enjoy guilt-free shopping with our free shipping on all orders. Get your favorite items delivered right to your door at no extra cost.